“The hospital here told me that there is no specialized care for my son, Abdul, here and that we should be transferred to a bigger hospital. I have a child who is sick, he’s totally paralyzed he is epileptic and he can’t even sleep. So far no one is able to help me here. I am a (single) mother with another 3 children and we are stuck in Lesbos.” Raido is a 27 year-old single mother of 4 from Somalia. She lived 3,5 months with her children in Moria camp and for the last 3 months she is living in an apartment near Moria. Her husband died before she took the decision to come to Greece. She receives no help for her paralyzed child and in Lesbos island there is no specialized doctor to help her child. For the past 4 months MSF doctors have seen at least 140 children with chronic and complex cases who have no access to medication and the specialized care they need. Some of them if they left untreated they might face life-long consequences or even death. © Anna Pantelia/MSF
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Lesvos: Greece denies healthcare to children n Moria camp

In Moria camp, on the island of Lesvos, the Greek government is deliberately depriving at least 140 children with chronic, complex and life-threatening diseases of adequate medical care. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is calling on the Greek government to act on these grave medical concerns and evacuate all severely ill children to the Greek mainland or other EU member states, where they can receive appropriate medical care. 

“We see many children suffering from medical conditions, such as diabetes, asthma and heart disease, who are forced to live in tents, in abysmal, unhygienic conditions, with no access to the specialized medical care and medication they need,” says Dr Hilde Vochten, MSF’s medical coordinator in Greece. “MSF is in discussions with the Greek authorities in order to transfer children to the mainland for urgent medical care, but despite the fact that some children were screened , none have been transferred yet.  The government’s general unwillingness to find a swift, systemic solution for these children, including some babies, is outrageous – it harms their health and could lead to life-long consequences or even death.”

 

In July 2019, the Greek government revoked access to public healthcare for asylum seekers and undocumented people arriving in Greece, leaving more than 55,000 people without medical care.

MSF in Moria camp 

 

Since March 2019, doctors in MSF’s paediatric health centre outside Moria camp on Lesvos have seen more than 270 cases of children suffering from chronic and complex illnesses, such as heart disease, epilepsy and diabetes. These require specialized treatment, which the MSF health centre is not equipped to provide. The local public hospital on Lesvos is also incapable of providing care for this additional number of patients and some specialised services are not available.

 

“My daughter, Zahra, is suffering from autism and we live a tiny space with almost no electricity. Often in the middle of the night she has seizures and there is no one to help us. I just want to be in a space where my daughter can play like other children and be treated by a good doctor.” Says Shamseyeh, from Afghanistan, who lives in Moria camp.

For the last four years, MSF has repeatedly denounced Moria camp as a human tragedy driven by goverment policies. This situation makes it clear, once again, that the migration policies generated by the EU-Turkey deal of 2016 are creating unnecessary suffering and putting many lives in danger.

 

“Children, women and men are paying the unjust price of migration policies based on deterrence. Denying children suffering from serious diseases access to healthcare is just the latest cynical move, and it is truly beyond belief.” says Tommaso Santo, MSF head of mission of in Greece.

MSF calls for the:

  • The immediate evacuation from Lesvos of all people suffering from chronic and complex conditions,  prioritising children by establishing a        system of regular transfer, to appropriate accommodation near providers of specialised medical care.
  • The urgent and immediate provision of access to free, timely and adequate healthcare for all asylum seekers, unaccompanied minors and undocumented people in Greece.
  • The end of the system of containment of refugees and asylum seekers in horrific and inhumane conditions on Lesvos.